174
174
Dec 29, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 174
favorite 0
quote 0
michael in new york. >> caller: hi, jim. i enjoy the show, thank you for helping me make money for my family. >> my pleasure. thank you for saying that to me. >> caller: i have two questions. they're somewhat related. what do you gain by getting a dividend if the share price goes down by the amount of the dividend and then you have to pay taxes to the dividend, and isn't comparing dividend stocks to a yield not a apples to apples comparison because of the greatest risk of losing your risk with stock as compared to the ten-year? >> let's get empirical, what stocks have outperformed for the last 20 or 30 years? stocks that pay good dividends. that's reinvested dividend. i'm getting this from jeremy seagal's work. go read his book and you will know exactly why i think dividends are so important. a pullback can be the market giving back. i like stocks that have pulled back from the new high list between 5% and 8%. do the homework. don't chase momentum, it's a starting point, not an ending point. "mad money" will be right back. >
michael in new york. >> caller: hi, jim. i enjoy the show, thank you for helping me make money for my family. >> my pleasure. thank you for saying that to me. >> caller: i have two questions. they're somewhat related. what do you gain by getting a dividend if the share price goes down by the amount of the dividend and then you have to pay taxes to the dividend, and isn't comparing dividend stocks to a yield not a apples to apples comparison because of the greatest risk of...
155
155
Jan 1, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 155
favorite 0
quote 0
>> caller: hi, jim, a big desert booyah to you. first of all, i want to thank you for the second half of last year, recommending home gamers to switch to big high quality stocks paying big dividends, felt better in the crazy time. >> yes, particularly when the market was down by 19% and we did not hit much at all with the strategy. >> caller: no they were great stocks. from calculating the peg growth, is it current year divided by prior year? >> yeah, future year estimates, you know, you i look at the step function, last year, this year, and next year, and it's between this year and next year that i care most about. what i do, frankly, just so you know, i do use the street estimates to try to calculate what the peg ratio is. with the exception of a couple stocks like apple over the course of the last few years i'm satisfied using street estimates as a way to go. an up side surprise can lead you to a major down side, don't believe the hype. check the sales before you check the earnings to be sure it's a real and not manufactured sur
>> caller: hi, jim, a big desert booyah to you. first of all, i want to thank you for the second half of last year, recommending home gamers to switch to big high quality stocks paying big dividends, felt better in the crazy time. >> yes, particularly when the market was down by 19% and we did not hit much at all with the strategy. >> caller: no they were great stocks. from calculating the peg growth, is it current year divided by prior year? >> yeah, future year...
238
238
Dec 26, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 238
favorite 0
quote 0
cramer, send jim an e-mail to madmoney@cnbc.com. miss something? head to madmoney .cnbc.com. >>> let's talk the price is right. no, not the game show with bob barker. i'm talking about the stocks. if you want to make money from your stocks, it's critical that i buy them at the right price. that's true whether you're making short-term trade or purchasing something that if everything goes right you expect to hold for years and years. the price still matters. when you pay too of for a stack, you make it vastly more difficult to rack up the kind of gains you and i want, the kind you can't get enough of here on "man money." if you get the price wrong, you my not make anything at all. so how do you find the best price to pull the trigger given how important i think it is? when you're investing for the long haul, you have one huge van, a resource traders don't have the luxury of exploiting. i'm talking about time. as the longer term investor, you've got all the time in the world. when you want to buy a stock because you like the underlying
cramer, send jim an e-mail to madmoney@cnbc.com. miss something? head to madmoney .cnbc.com. >>> let's talk the price is right. no, not the game show with bob barker. i'm talking about the stocks. if you want to make money from your stocks, it's critical that i buy them at the right price. that's true whether you're making short-term trade or purchasing something that if everything goes right you expect to hold for years and years. the price still matters. when you pay too of for a...
174
174
Dec 27, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 174
favorite 0
quote 0
tom in california, please, tom. >> caller: hi, jim. from sunny warm san diego, america's finest city. >> i like the dats. >> caller: i'm a financial adviser and longtime viewer who appreciates what you do to educate and motivate investors. >> thank you. >> caller: i'm wondering if you would share your objective criteria are for investors to use in determining best of breed. thank you. >> well, i've got to tell you, best of breed, start with record dividends and then i go to how a company has done and consistently in good and bad times, and, yes, for best of breed i actually look at the product itself. is the product i want to use, a bank i want to go to? is it, to use the danny meyer phrase, a great restauranteur, is it the one that's the most hospitable to share holders? anyway, new diversification. it's important. it's what we're preaching tonight. make sure your portfolio is home to some gold, a high yielder, okay. you need a growth stock. you know what, you need geographically safe area for one of them. i'll teach you how to pick t
tom in california, please, tom. >> caller: hi, jim. from sunny warm san diego, america's finest city. >> i like the dats. >> caller: i'm a financial adviser and longtime viewer who appreciates what you do to educate and motivate investors. >> thank you. >> caller: i'm wondering if you would share your objective criteria are for investors to use in determining best of breed. thank you. >> well, i've got to tell you, best of breed, start with record dividends...
126
126
Dec 28, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 126
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> caller: hi, jim. for a beginning investor new to the stock market, would you advise shorting stock? and could you explain how one would make money trading in that manner? >> no, i do not advise shorting stock. losses can be infinite. i would prefer you to buy puts and you protect your upside sales call. and you protect your down side, and go back to getting even. i describe in 100 pages how it's better to buy puts. we know the key things to look for. great stocks to buy, insider buying is one of them, particularly when there is a heavy short position. that can often be a combustible situation that can explode to the upside. stay with cramer. >>> nobody is more passionate about the market than i am. nobody in the whole country. >> i want to thank you. have you saved my retirement. >> you are why i come out here and do this show. thank you so much. >> the stuff that are you doing for all of us, is so important. i want to say thank you. >> my husband and i watch every day, and we count on your help for s
. >> caller: hi, jim. for a beginning investor new to the stock market, would you advise shorting stock? and could you explain how one would make money trading in that manner? >> no, i do not advise shorting stock. losses can be infinite. i would prefer you to buy puts and you protect your upside sales call. and you protect your down side, and go back to getting even. i describe in 100 pages how it's better to buy puts. we know the key things to look for. great stocks to buy,...
122
122
Jan 3, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 122
favorite 0
quote 0
>> well weeks have a broad portfolio of items, jim. one of the ones i know you mentioned on your past shows, holy guacamole is a great product line that works very well on those channels. we'll look for channels with this product line to connect with that channel as well. we have a broad portfolio. this transaction will certainly enhance the packaged food side of that. >> we knew of another company we thought was going to be a bidder. was this one of those wars where younded up paying far more that where you started or was this the level you were comfortable and you were able to get it for that? >> we were very comfortable with the level we paid. one of the issues we talked bont conference call, there's a tax cash flow advantage, adding up to a net present value of about $120 million to $125 million. if you net that out of the 7 million nopsed price, we're in a very comfortable position in terms of a dcf model. >> congratulations. great for shareholders. you've done a remarkable job, not just you but your predecessors. thank you very m
>> well weeks have a broad portfolio of items, jim. one of the ones i know you mentioned on your past shows, holy guacamole is a great product line that works very well on those channels. we'll look for channels with this product line to connect with that channel as well. we have a broad portfolio. this transaction will certainly enhance the packaged food side of that. >> we knew of another company we thought was going to be a bidder. was this one of those wars where younded up...
131
131
Dec 27, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
joe. >> caller: hi, booyah, jim. stop loss orders versus stop limits and how to use that not only to minimize the ups and downs. >> if you're going to own these and you're going to try to get the right prices, you have to stay on top of it. i'm sorry. it's too important. you get a stock flash. you buy the stock at 80 and suddenly -- it's too crazed. you have to protect yourself from this market. from any market that acts as badly and strangely. those old tricks out the window. price matters. don't buy all at once. keep an open mind. stay with cramer. >>> the only way to generate consistently strong returns year after year is by putting thought and effort into the process. it's like a personal trainer who promises that you can get in shape without doing any exercises, here's a pill. it doesn't work. yet i think a substantial majority of the public still believes this buy and hold nonsense is the only legitimate way to in vest. i read about it in the papers. no wonder stocks are so hated. people are convinced if they b
joe. >> caller: hi, booyah, jim. stop loss orders versus stop limits and how to use that not only to minimize the ups and downs. >> if you're going to own these and you're going to try to get the right prices, you have to stay on top of it. i'm sorry. it's too important. you get a stock flash. you buy the stock at 80 and suddenly -- it's too crazed. you have to protect yourself from this market. from any market that acts as badly and strangely. those old tricks out the window. price...
189
189
Jan 2, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 189
favorite 0
quote 0
in the meantime, "mad money" with jim cramer starts right now. >>> i'm jim cramer and welcome to my world. >> you need to get in the game. >> funds are go going to go out of business, they're nuts. they know nothing! >> i always like to say there's a bull market somewhere. >> hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money," welcome to cramerica. my job is not just to entertain, but to teach and to coach you. so call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. may 2013 be as good as 2012 for you in the stock market. that's what i found myself thinking all day, in spite of today's incredible action, best day in over a year of the. the dow soaring 108 points. the nasdaq rockets 3.07%, i feel like i'm surrounded by people who are already fretting about the next big bad thing. this time it's the debt ceiling fight. they're worried eem as it seems the market has a tremendous case of seller's remorse. they're scared. even as it seems those who fled the market year end are in their buying and buying the same stocks we sold. when we looked certain to plunge into the fiscal abyss. how else do you explain how we got the best fir
in the meantime, "mad money" with jim cramer starts right now. >>> i'm jim cramer and welcome to my world. >> you need to get in the game. >> funds are go going to go out of business, they're nuts. they know nothing! >> i always like to say there's a bull market somewhere. >> hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money," welcome to cramerica. my job is not just to entertain, but to teach and to coach you. so call me at 1-800-743-cnbc. may 2013 be...
131
131
Dec 26, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
boo-yah, jim cramer. >> boo-yah! >> caller: i have a question there. what is meant by a reverse split stock? >> that means if there's a million shares, you know, say they do a 3-1, you know, they get to 300,000 shares. what is typically gone, ci citigroup did it. if you have 300 billion shares, you divide by three, you get 100 billion. it does raise the price, but it's illusory. you just have fewer shares. tyler in florida, please? tyler? >> caller: i'm going to give you a south florida boo-yah. >> i'll take that. i need to go there now. always. what's up? >> caller: sun is shining -- actually, no, it's overcast. quick question. when you talk about the economy, you know, really booting off again, it seems like you talk about it in terms of consuming and not producing. i'm thinking from the way i think about it, you need something to be produced before it's consumed. i'm wondering why -- in terms of a growing economy you talk about consumption instead of production. that's what it seems like to me. >> i do because in order to be able to raise price, you
boo-yah, jim cramer. >> boo-yah! >> caller: i have a question there. what is meant by a reverse split stock? >> that means if there's a million shares, you know, say they do a 3-1, you know, they get to 300,000 shares. what is typically gone, ci citigroup did it. if you have 300 billion shares, you divide by three, you get 100 billion. it does raise the price, but it's illusory. you just have fewer shares. tyler in florida, please? tyler? >> caller: i'm going to give you...
109
109
Jan 3, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 109
favorite 0
quote 0
let's go to bob in new jersey. >> caller: hi, jim. this is bob grunder from the storm-ravaged town of manasquan, new jersey. >> let's hope congress hears you. the guy was like listen i'm worried about waste. i'm worried about people's homes, i'm not talking about second homes, i'm talking about first homes, i think congress could address it, i sure hope so, governor christie, come on the show, repeat what you said, you're the man, go ahead. >> i have a reasonable position in gardner denver at 35 and eaton at 50. knowing that gardner denver is a takeover target and eaton at 56 seems a little rich, i would like to increase my position in one or the other. which one would you recommend and at what price for a long-term hold? >> all right. gardner denver we do, we don't know, it doesn't look like there's a deal, we don't speculate. the fundamentals just okay there. eaton, that sandy cutler has done a remarkable job. but i'm not a buyer of stocks after an up 3% move, when they pull back it's going to be eaton is the one that i like. the be
let's go to bob in new jersey. >> caller: hi, jim. this is bob grunder from the storm-ravaged town of manasquan, new jersey. >> let's hope congress hears you. the guy was like listen i'm worried about waste. i'm worried about people's homes, i'm not talking about second homes, i'm talking about first homes, i think congress could address it, i sure hope so, governor christie, come on the show, repeat what you said, you're the man, go ahead. >> i have a reasonable position in...
64
64
Dec 31, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
then the democrats should be screaming, jim. because if the money -- the money before didn't make a dent in the deficit, this deal while good for america may not -- is going to by default make less of an impact. >> all they really wanted to do was make sure they stuck to their campaign promise they were going to raise tax on the upper class. and that's fine. there's no meaningful reduction to the deficit until we deal with medicare and defense. >> we've got to go. happy new year, gentlemen. >> you too. >> let's bring in eamon now. mitch mcconnell surprising at least us coming out saying that. looks like they're close to a deal. good news? >> absolutely good news. definitely an indication that mitch mcconnell thinks as he said they are very, very close. now, interesting about mcconnell's comments. he's saying he thinks they are very close or graed on the tax piece of this deal. and maybe they should take that and come back for the spending piece later. that's going to be an interesting decoupling of what we thought was going to b
then the democrats should be screaming, jim. because if the money -- the money before didn't make a dent in the deficit, this deal while good for america may not -- is going to by default make less of an impact. >> all they really wanted to do was make sure they stuck to their campaign promise they were going to raise tax on the upper class. and that's fine. there's no meaningful reduction to the deficit until we deal with medicare and defense. >> we've got to go. happy new year,...
323
323
Dec 26, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 323
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm jim cramer. see you tomorrow. >>> coming up on "worldwide exchange," retail reality check. it's the day after christmas, early data shows the slowest growth in spending since 2008 this holiday season. we're crunching the numbers for you. >>> the u.s. is set to go over the fiscal cliff in five days. that means taxes will go up for nearly every american. dramatic spending cuts will kick in. president obama and congress will be back from vacation tomorrow. but will anything get done? >>> plus, wild winter weather sweeping through the country. we'll bring you the latest details on which part of the u.s. could be hit next. cnbc's "worldwide exchange" starts now. >>> and welcome to a special edition of reside worldwide. ross andcle reoff today for boxes day in -- kelly are off today for boxing day. for now, you is us. >> we'll start with a brief check on the markets. energy and metals are trading higher now, wtis up about 55 cents. brent crude up 65 cents. also want to check in on the gold price, as well. gold right now down about slightly under the flat line there, 1,-658. well
i'm jim cramer. see you tomorrow. >>> coming up on "worldwide exchange," retail reality check. it's the day after christmas, early data shows the slowest growth in spending since 2008 this holiday season. we're crunching the numbers for you. >>> the u.s. is set to go over the fiscal cliff in five days. that means taxes will go up for nearly every american. dramatic spending cuts will kick in. president obama and congress will be back from vacation tomorrow. but will...
169
169
Jan 3, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 169
favorite 0
quote 0
jim newsel, you called the fiscal cliff deal to this point a fiasco. what had your high expectations for what's to come on the spending and the debt limit that they have to deal with in the next couple of months? >> i don't have very high expectations. >> i didn't think so. >> i mean, i think at this point in time we're seeing history we pete itself and why congressman congressman brooks voted against the deal. congratulations on being sworn in again today, congressman brooks. >> thank you. >> but i think mo is right. you know, the taxes have been -- have been settled. whether he voted for them or not, taxes are settled. it's now on to entitlement reform and spending, and historically whether it's in reagan or bush or even in clinton, there were very few opportunities for cutting real spending or reforming entitlements that went along with tax increases, and that's what needs to happen. you've got to drop the -- and bend the growth curve in entitlement spending if you're going to have any chance at all in getting back to any sustainability on the debt,
jim newsel, you called the fiscal cliff deal to this point a fiasco. what had your high expectations for what's to come on the spending and the debt limit that they have to deal with in the next couple of months? >> i don't have very high expectations. >> i didn't think so. >> i mean, i think at this point in time we're seeing history we pete itself and why congressman congressman brooks voted against the deal. congratulations on being sworn in again today, congressman brooks....
184
184
Jan 2, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 184
favorite 0
quote 0
jim cramer joins us now. does that mean the dogs will be better this year, jim? normally, right? >> dow versus the s&p, i've got to tell you, up 7%, 16%, maybe we've got to go back over and look at the dow. there are probably some bargains there, joe. >> jim, will this be you, now that we've -- i can argue from two sides, i made the point earlier, i think that they're still saying there may be a point to a point and a half drag on the gdp because of this. but don't you think the improvements in housing and having maybe a little bit of certainty, don't you think that we can grow above where we've been recently? don't you think the u.s. economy is that resilient? >> thank you, joe. because this is my theme for the beginning of the year, which is that this -- no one's happy with the deal. but i do believe there's momentum coming in. don't forget the need to rebuild from sandy. don't forget the autos are surging. i believe very strongly we have very good tailwinds coming into the year. also, europe better than we think. asia better than we think. latin america better than we think. t
jim cramer joins us now. does that mean the dogs will be better this year, jim? normally, right? >> dow versus the s&p, i've got to tell you, up 7%, 16%, maybe we've got to go back over and look at the dow. there are probably some bargains there, joe. >> jim, will this be you, now that we've -- i can argue from two sides, i made the point earlier, i think that they're still saying there may be a point to a point and a half drag on the gdp because of this. but don't you think the...
186
186
Jan 2, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 186
favorite 0
quote 0
jim rogers type stuff. vietnam, laos. >> myanmar. >> go for it, brian. >> burma, north haverbrook. >> other sectors we're watching today, the steel sector getting a major boost from a credit suisse. price target for six companies in this group, they're citing the fiscal cliff resolution, of course, and up side in china. they say the channel checks, that there's more reasonable inventory levels. so pricing is better. >> steel intelligence saying this is a very good level. i think letter x has done nothing for asia. i remember when it was $180 stock. i would tell people, again, that the resource based stocks are more china oriented, and i think china's going to have a very big year. remember, the euro is supposed to break up. the brics were no longer brics, they were soft putty. housing is supposed to go to zero. we could go over and over the things that were going to happen, that didn't happen. what did different repd rate go up? 40%? 45%? remember that worry? selling those dividends left and right. >> you c
jim rogers type stuff. vietnam, laos. >> myanmar. >> go for it, brian. >> burma, north haverbrook. >> other sectors we're watching today, the steel sector getting a major boost from a credit suisse. price target for six companies in this group, they're citing the fiscal cliff resolution, of course, and up side in china. they say the channel checks, that there's more reasonable inventory levels. so pricing is better. >> steel intelligence saying this is a very good...
103
103
Jan 2, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
jim o'neill speaks from a different point of view than i would. maybity right in the thick of it down here. i'm a big believe in america. big believe in the markets. i have be a exposure to the markets like everybody does but i'm not ready to pass the mantle to somebody else. >> rich, we are talking about fighting the fed and what is bad idea that is. bonds are another market that people seem to not fight the fed but is this is the year that interest rates start higher? >> we don't know that. the fed is a huge elephant in the room and it is as long as they keep buying bonds, you don't have a problem. the thing that concerns me is that -- >> go ahead. >> the thing that concerns me is we borrow a trillion plus dollars a year, so if other members of the world decide ton buy our bonds, i don't think the fed can buy all of them. >> okay. so if you look at what's been happening though, you would bet that this year would be the year that we stay steady again? or just keep listening to the fed to see what they say? >> i think expectations are, we are goin
jim o'neill speaks from a different point of view than i would. maybity right in the thick of it down here. i'm a big believe in america. big believe in the markets. i have be a exposure to the markets like everybody does but i'm not ready to pass the mantle to somebody else. >> rich, we are talking about fighting the fed and what is bad idea that is. bonds are another market that people seem to not fight the fed but is this is the year that interest rates start higher? >> we don't...
203
203
Dec 31, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 203
favorite 0
quote 0
we have jim o'neill. he's going to join us to talk about whether he is bullish for the start of 2013 and how much the fiscal cliff is playing into his outlook. >>> welcome back to "squawk box" this morning. take a look at futures for the day, the s&p is up a little over 7 points as we await to see what happens with the fiscal cliff. >> it is the last trading day of the year. how will the global marketses react to our domestic drama? calling in right now on the squawk news line is jim o'neill. it's great to be speaking with you this morning. i know we made it through the mayan apocalypse, but will we make it three through the fiscal cliff, as well? >> gosh, i don't know. i keep exchanging my mind about this every day in the past week. what is quite encouraging in a way is that other markets around the world, other important mark particular are trading so much of their own issues that the disappointment in the u.s. has not affected them at all. and while europe has given a bit back, it's barely noticeable.
we have jim o'neill. he's going to join us to talk about whether he is bullish for the start of 2013 and how much the fiscal cliff is playing into his outlook. >>> welcome back to "squawk box" this morning. take a look at futures for the day, the s&p is up a little over 7 points as we await to see what happens with the fiscal cliff. >> it is the last trading day of the year. how will the global marketses react to our domestic drama? calling in right now on the...
274
274
Dec 26, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 274
favorite 0
quote 0
jim cantore in mobile, alabama. twisters hit yesterday, quite a few, i think, right, jim? >> reporter: yeah. the storm prediction center says 34, our severe weather expert who tracks tornadoes and sees which are duplicated says 19. which for whatever it's worth is a record day for tornadoes on christmas. the previous record was 1969 with 12 tornadoes. guys, here's the deal. now we have tornado season in the middle of winter. and that seems to be what happens nowadays. you see behind me this church was pretty heavily damaged. look at the roof. two sections ripped off. then dropped below. and given the fact that this debris was just dropped off down here, i'm going to probably estimate these winds somewhere in the 90 to 100 mile-per-hour range. so probably ef-1, maybe ef-2 damage. they typically go along the tornado path and look at the damage to assess an actual rating if you will in terms of what that damage is. behind me, a lot of cleanup here on dauphin street. the crews will be cleaning the debris. you see the power lines hanging over. draping over there. some of the tr
jim cantore in mobile, alabama. twisters hit yesterday, quite a few, i think, right, jim? >> reporter: yeah. the storm prediction center says 34, our severe weather expert who tracks tornadoes and sees which are duplicated says 19. which for whatever it's worth is a record day for tornadoes on christmas. the previous record was 1969 with 12 tornadoes. guys, here's the deal. now we have tornado season in the middle of winter. and that seems to be what happens nowadays. you see behind me...
279
279
Dec 28, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 279
favorite 0
quote 1
welcome to the program, jim. how do you argue that we'll get potentially, what is it, 1,700, i think, on the s&p, is the call. >> yeah, i think it can get up to 1,700 during the year, simon, touching that. i don't know if it will end the year, but i'm thing 15 to 20% rerps, and i think it's mainly about confidence. i think we've produced a lot of the earnings that we're going to produce in this recovery cycle. we're still going to eget earnings growth, but it's going to be much slower from here. what we have left is a lot of room to increase the valuation we place in those earnings. and that's about improving confidence. look at, going into the year, look at the things that we've accomplished when we start 2013. i think in a couple weeks, we're going to have some progress made on the fiscal issues. it may be modest, but i think we'll get some agreement. we will have revised chinese and world recoveries. we will have calmed, dramatically, your zone fears, at least away from a calamitous event. we will have geared
welcome to the program, jim. how do you argue that we'll get potentially, what is it, 1,700, i think, on the s&p, is the call. >> yeah, i think it can get up to 1,700 during the year, simon, touching that. i don't know if it will end the year, but i'm thing 15 to 20% rerps, and i think it's mainly about confidence. i think we've produced a lot of the earnings that we're going to produce in this recovery cycle. we're still going to eget earnings growth, but it's going to be much slower...
223
223
Jan 3, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 223
favorite 0
quote 0
can't start your trading day without jim cramer's stocks to watch. we will head to the new york stock e stock exchange right after this. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 that kind of focus... tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 that's what i have when i trade. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and the streetsmart edge trading platform from charles schwab... tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 ...helps me keep an eye on what's really important to me. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 it's packed with tools that help me work my strategies, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 spot patterns and find opportunities more easily. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 then, when i'm ready... act decisively. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 i can even access it from the cloud and trade on any computer. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 with the exact same tools, the exact same way. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and the reality is, with schwab mobile, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 i can focus on trading anyplace, anytime... tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 ...until i choose to focus on something else. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 all this with no trade minimu
can't start your trading day without jim cramer's stocks to watch. we will head to the new york stock e stock exchange right after this. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 that kind of focus... tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 that's what i have when i trade. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 and the streetsmart edge trading platform from charles schwab... tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 ...helps me keep an eye on what's really important to me. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 it's packed with tools that help me...
172
172
Dec 27, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 172
favorite 0
quote 0
for more on the day let's get to jim iuorio director of t.m. amens institutional services and a cnbc contributor. i guess the reason i phrase the question, jim, the markets had been sort of quiet, the vix has been kind of quiet, as well. is something on the horizon, or i mean we've talked about it so much, is there anyone that doesn't know? >> no. i just think the markets have grown accustomed to the notion that we're actually going over the cliff. we were always going over the cliff, and that gives the republicans ground cover to lower taxes, and not raise them. is it a game? is it ridiculous that they play this with the economic future of the country? of course it is. but you drew the connection to t.a.r.p. that's when we first learned that they can show some incompetence at very critical moments. the market's fine with that right now. but i do think the consensus is that once they reach a deal, even after the cliff, that the market's going to knee-jerk higher. when everyone is on the same side of the boat that worries me a little bit. i incr
for more on the day let's get to jim iuorio director of t.m. amens institutional services and a cnbc contributor. i guess the reason i phrase the question, jim, the markets had been sort of quiet, the vix has been kind of quiet, as well. is something on the horizon, or i mean we've talked about it so much, is there anyone that doesn't know? >> no. i just think the markets have grown accustomed to the notion that we're actually going over the cliff. we were always going over the cliff, and...
151
151
Dec 26, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
carl, back to you. >>> jim, those are some pictures. a lot of people in the northeast paying close attention to that storm as it gets closer and closer to us. jim cantore, thanks for that. >>> let's get over to the cme group. rick santelli has the santelli exchange. good morning, rick. >> good morning, carl. i guess no topic makes me grind my teeth more than the culmination of the entire bailout nation issues than housing, okay? only can the u.s. government, i take that back, only can government, period, including the u.s. government turn a detour into a four-lane highway, okay? let's talk about infusion. governments tried to create faux guarantees when they set up the gses when they created the structure of special financing and faux guarantees whether they were applied or assumed, we all know how it turned out. taxpayers ended up getting the bill when government took over the space. and then we get all the faux guarantees of fixing the original faux guarantees as the intrusion really did get worse. i take you back to september of 2008
carl, back to you. >>> jim, those are some pictures. a lot of people in the northeast paying close attention to that storm as it gets closer and closer to us. jim cantore, thanks for that. >>> let's get over to the cme group. rick santelli has the santelli exchange. good morning, rick. >> good morning, carl. i guess no topic makes me grind my teeth more than the culmination of the entire bailout nation issues than housing, okay? only can the u.s. government, i take that...
190
190
Dec 28, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 190
favorite 0
quote 0
and still ahead, congressman jim mcdermott with the latest on the fiscal cliff negotiations. first, though, an american military hero has died, norman schwarzkopf passed away in florida yesterday. remember he was popularly known as stormin' norman and he was the u.s. general who led the 1991 operation "desert storm," which liberated kuwait from iraqi dictator saddam hussein, and you know, the 41 is ill and actually sent out a statement about the general late yesterday, when we're all thinking about 41, as well. schwarzkopf was 78. [ male announcer ] it's that time of year again. time for citi price rewind. because your daughter really wants that pink castle thing. and you really don't want to pay more than you have to. only citi price rewind automatically searches for the lowest price. and if it finds one, you get refunded the difference. just use your citi card and register your purchase online. have a super sparkly day! ok. [ male announcer ] now all you need is a magic carriage. citi price rewind. start saving at citi.com/pricerewind. >>> welcome back to "squawk box" this
and still ahead, congressman jim mcdermott with the latest on the fiscal cliff negotiations. first, though, an american military hero has died, norman schwarzkopf passed away in florida yesterday. remember he was popularly known as stormin' norman and he was the u.s. general who led the 1991 operation "desert storm," which liberated kuwait from iraqi dictator saddam hussein, and you know, the 41 is ill and actually sent out a statement about the general late yesterday, when we're all...